by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
I'm guessing writing has never been an easy business, but it seems particularly task-intensive in 2022. Not only do writers have to write the books, we have to promote them, too.
With all the other things on our plate, writing-related tasks can fall by the wayside. I know they're one of my favorite things to procrastinate.
Here are some tips for getting those tasks done. . . by using a batching or grouping technique.
Do a brain-dump of everything you need to get done. For me, this is the most important item on the list. If I don't spitball all the variegated tasks I need to get done, I'll be up at night worrying well-nigh what's slipping through the cracks. Just empty out your throne by listing all of it in a notebook on a Word document. This could be working on reprinting (updating your bio, writing typesetting descriptions, ad copy, etc.), blogging, or writing-related merchantry like advertising, tracking sales, waffly typesetting prices, or uploading your books on increasingly platforms.
Decide how long you want to spend on each task per day. Plus, segregate when you want to tackle it. Can you make progress in one hour a day (often, setting smaller goals helps stay motivated)? When is a point in your day that you should be worldly-wise to focus? Or, what's a high-energy time of day for you?
Do just that one thing during the time you've set aside. Depending on how long you've scheduled, make sure you're taking short breaks to stretch or hydrate. If you're working on a large project (like taking an razzmatazz undertow and setting up ads), just add multiple days on your timetable to tackle it. Doing just that one task (blogging, etc.) can go quicker considering you're in that mindset and can work faster.
You can moreover make adjustments to help this technique work largest for you. Maybe you want to assign variegated tasks to variegated days of the week (blogging on Mondays, metadata on Tuesdays). Or maybe you want to set up one day a month to tackle all the odds and ends you haven't been worldly-wise to get to (a sort of “catch-all” day).
This tideway moreover works really well for personal tasks, too. Maybe you have a slew of dental appointments or physicals to schedule for your family. Maybe you've got a big photo-digitizing or organizing project you want to get done. Give it a go and see if it helps.
How do you handle working in all your writing-related tasks?
Finishing Writing-Related Tasks Quickly:
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